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Mayoral Strategies (Supplementary) [4]

  • Question by: Valerie Shawcross
  • Meeting date: 17 October 2001
It would be wrong to blame any of the individuals who were there. The problem seems to be that the message is coming around that their key concern, which is about the siting of the boundary - an issue of incredible detail locally - is not going to change, and that the core elements of the scheme as currently published are not up for change. If the boundary siting is a problem, what will be done about it, when the council and the community almost with one voice say, "Do not put the boundary along Kennington Lane."?

Mayoral Strategies (Supplementary) [3]

  • Question by: Angie Bray
  • Meeting date: 17 October 2001
It was a question, and I will ask another question. To be honest about this, the numbers that travel on buses are tiny compared to the number on the Tube, so "tinkering" is an accurate description. Anyway, let me provide you with an example in which the carrot approach has been slightly more successful. Jenny Jones mentioned this interesting scheme that has been set up in Perth in Australia, and you said you would like to go and look at it, which might be a good thing. What Jenny did not tell you is that it is entirely to do...

Mayoral Strategies (Supplementary) [2]

  • Question by: Valerie Shawcross
  • Meeting date: 17 October 2001
It would be wrong to blame any of the individuals who were there. The problem seems to be that the message is coming around that their key concern, which is about the siting of the boundary - an issue of incredible detail locally - is not going to change, and that the core elements of the scheme as currently published are not up for change. If the boundary siting is a problem, what will be done about it, when the council and the community almost with one voice say, "Do not put the boundary along Kennington Lane."?

Mayoral Strategies (Supplementary) [1]

  • Question by: Valerie Shawcross
  • Meeting date: 17 October 2001
Rather than sticks and carrots, Ken, can I talk about bulldozers for a minute? I was present at a very broadly based community meeting in Kennington and Vauxhall on Monday night. Two thirds of the community there - most of them chairs of residents' associations and so forth - expressed support for congestion charging at the beginning of the meeting. By the end of the meeting, I think as a result of their deep sense that TfL does not listen to local communities and is not interested and probably will not change very much, people were walking out. Are you...

Mayors Report (London Fire-Fighters) (Supplementary) [1]

  • Question by: Brian Coleman
  • Meeting date: 17 October 2001
Will the Mayor support moves by me and by Valerie Shawcross and other members of the Fire Authority to reverse this policy, so that London, which of course is the United Kingdom's premier fire brigade, can once again take the lead? Many county brigades send firefighters abroad, and seem to have got around the various bureaucratic problems. Will he support the moves that Valerie and I and other are making in that respect?

CCTV on buses (Supplementary) [2]

  • Question by: John Biggs
  • Meeting date: 17 October 2001
: It is unprecedented, but I more or less agree with Richard Barnes - although not necessarily with his approach. If you want to be re-elected, Mr Livingstone, you have to show that you can cut through the bureaucracy and get these things delivered more quickly than they have been delivered before. People expect that of the executive Mayor of London. The idea is that the Mayor should be someone who gets in with a knife and, whoosh, it happens. Bus cameras are one example; speed cameras are another. Many residential communities in London would welcome rapid intervention by you...

CCTV on buses (Supplementary) [1]

  • Question by: Richard Barnes
  • Meeting date: 17 October 2001
I thank the Mayor, and the Chairman for reading the question out. We started with commitments, Mr Mayor. They became aspirations, and my fear is that we are now into procrastination. CCTV coverage and protection on buses is an argument well led, well made, fully understood and fully supported. If you look at what London General Buses have done at Sutton, you will see that, since February this year, when they introduced some 12 CCTV cameras, they have virtually eliminated attacks on members of staff, have achieved over 100 successful prosecutions of vandals maltreating buses and have shown that, by...

Update to the Mayor's Report (Supplementary) [16]

  • Question by: Jennette Arnold OBE
  • Meeting date: 19 September 2001
I would like to add my voice to everything that has been said. Later on today, I shall be meeting a group of black women whose concerns are about their families, here in London, in the United Kingdom generally, in New York and around the world. The group is part of the diaspora of black women - African, Muslim and Christian - and they will meet me for support and to see how they can be of support if, at any time in the future, their communities suffer attack. Our words and behaviour here today reflect the fact that politicians...

Update to the Mayor's Report (Supplementary) [15]

  • Question by: Eric Ollerenshaw
  • Meeting date: 19 September 2001
I think it is the RMT and Londoners who need your help, Mr Mayor, to avoid a strike.

Update to the Mayor's Report (Supplementary) [14]

  • Question by: Eric Ollerenshaw
  • Meeting date: 19 September 2001
My question is on key engagements. I refer to 24 July, when you met Aslef and the RMT, and to 14 August, when you met John Monks of the TUC. Was it at those meetings that you decided to support the RMT side in the proposed deal on the London Underground for a 4% pay rise, which you so eloquently explained to me two weeks ago, on 5 September, when you said: "ACAS has awarded 4% without strings. RMT accept that decision. London Underground are refusing to implement it, and I think it is absolutely outrageous and typical of the...
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